Open vs. Closed Rhinoplasty
One of the most common questions patients ask before a rhinoplasty consultation is whether they need an open rhinoplasty or a closed rhinoplasty. The answer depends entirely on what the nose requires — not surgeon preference or habit. Dr. Rafizadeh has performed both approaches for over 30 years and selects the one that gives each patient's anatomy the most precise, predictable result.
What Is Closed Rhinoplasty?
In a closed rhinoplasty (also called endonasal rhinoplasty), all incisions are placed entirely inside the nostrils. There is no external incision, no visible scar, and the nasal skin envelope is never lifted. The surgeon works through two small internal openings, manipulating the cartilage and bone beneath the skin through feel, experience, and indirect visualization.
The advantages of closed rhinoplasty in NJ are meaningful: no external scar, slightly less post-operative swelling because the skin is not lifted, and a shorter operating time for cases that don't require direct visualization. The limitation is access — complex tip reshaping, significant asymmetry correction, or revision cases where normal anatomy is distorted benefit from the direct visualization that only an open approach can provide.
What Is Open Rhinoplasty?
In an open rhinoplasty (also called external rhinoplasty), a small incision — typically 4–5mm — is made across the columella, the strip of skin between the nostrils. The nasal skin is then lifted to expose the entire cartilage and bone framework directly, giving the surgeon complete visualization and access to every structural component of the nose.
For patients concerned about scarring from open rhinoplasty in New Jersey, the columellar incision is placed in a natural skin crease at the narrowest point of the columella and is virtually invisible at conversational distance within a few months of healing. The benefit — complete, direct access to the nasal framework — is significant for complex cases, and the scar tradeoff is minimal in experienced hands.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Factor | Closed Rhinoplasty | Open Rhinoplasty |
|---|---|---|
| External scar | None | Small columellar scar (fades well) |
| Surgeon's visibility | Indirect / tactile | Full direct visualization |
| Swelling | Slightly less tip swelling | Slightly more initial tip swelling |
| Operating time | Shorter (for simple cases) | Slightly longer |
| Best for | Simple hump reductions, minor tip work | Complex tip reshaping, asymmetry, revision |
| Revision suitability | Limited — scarred anatomy is harder to navigate | Preferred — direct access to altered structures |
| Preservation technique | Commonly used together | Can be combined if tip work needed |
How Dr. Rafizadeh Chooses the Approach
The decision is anatomy-first and case-specific. Dr. Rafizadeh uses a closed approach when the primary concern is the dorsum (hump, profile), tip support is adequate, and the changes needed can be executed precisely through internal access alone. He uses an open approach when the tip requires significant reshaping, when significant asymmetry must be corrected under direct vision, in revision cases where normal landmarks are absent, or when the overall complexity of the plan demands the precision that only full exposure provides.
In practice, many rhinoplasties that patients expect to be "simple" turn out to benefit from an open approach once Dr. Rafizadeh has evaluated the anatomy — and many patients who assume they need an open procedure are well-served by closed technique. The consultation is where this determination is made. See also: Preservation Rhinoplasty — often performed through a closed approach →
“The question isn’t open or closed — it’s what does this nose actually need? The incision is a tool. I use whichever tool gives your anatomy the most accurate correction.”
— Dr. Farhad Rafizadeh, MD FACS
Does the Approach Affect My Result?
The approach does not determine result quality — the surgeon's skill and judgment do. In the right hands, both open and closed rhinoplasty produce excellent outcomes. The risk of a poor result comes from choosing the wrong approach for the anatomy, or from insufficient experience with either technique. Dr. Rafizadeh's 30+ years of rhinoplasty experience includes a large volume of both open and closed cases, and his selection is always based on what will produce the most precise, predictable result for that specific patient.
Recovery & What to Expect
Recovery is similar for both approaches. A nasal splint is worn for one week regardless of technique. Closed rhinoplasty patients often notice slightly less tip swelling in the first few weeks because the skin envelope was not elevated. Open rhinoplasty patients may see a bit more early tip swelling, but this resolves fully — and the final result at 6–12 months is indistinguishable in terms of swelling history. The columellar scar from open rhinoplasty fades progressively over 3–12 months and is rarely a concern long-term.